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Bitcoin Faces Heavy Sell Wall at $72,500: What’s Next?

source-logo  thecryptobasic.com 3 h
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Bitcoin structure is showing signs of short-term weakness, as fresh order book data highlights an imbalance between overhead resistance and lower support liquidity.

Data shared by CoinGlass reveals that large players, or whales, have positioned strong sell orders above current price levels. At the same time, buy-side liquidity remains layered below.

Heavy Bitcoin Sell Wall Caps Upside

According to the whale order book, a dense cluster of sell orders sits between $72,300 and $72,600, forming a major resistance zone. This area represents a key hurdle for any upward movement, with significant supply likely to absorb bullish momentum on a bounce.

The presence of this “sell wall” suggests that even if Bitcoin attempts a recovery, it may struggle to break through without a surge in demand or volume.

Notably, this resistance region is already in effect, as Bitcoin’s price dipped 2.64% over the past day. It traded above $71,600 yesterday but has now fallen to $69,150 as of press time.

Layered Support Below Current Price

Meanwhile, on the downside, smaller bids are visible around $69,200, offering some immediate support. However, stronger buying interest is positioned lower, between $68,200 and $68,500.

Beyond that, deeper liquidity pockets lie in the $67,000 to $67,500 range. This is a typical market setup, with strong resistance above and buy orders spread below. Price usually moves toward areas with higher liquidity.

For Bitcoin, that means it may drop first to fill lower buy orders before any meaningful recovery. Unless $BTC breaks above $72K, short-term price action still appears bearish, with a possible dip before a stronger bounce.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin also faces significant pressure from the derivatives market.

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More Pressure for $BTC Amid $18.6B Options Expiry

As Bitcoin currently ranges between $67,700 and $71,600, traders are eyeing Friday’s $18.6 billion options expiry as a potential catalyst for a breakout.

Although call options worth $11.2 billion exceed puts at $7.4 billion, most bullish bets are placed far above current prices, making many likely to expire worthless.

At current levels, put options hold a slight advantage across most price ranges below $75K. For bulls to take control, Bitcoin needs roughly a 6% move above $75K before expiry.

Meanwhile, macro pressure, rising oil prices, and economic uncertainty have strengthened the bearish case. The war in the Middle East continues to escalate, and there has been no indication of the Strait of Hormuz reopening anytime soon, causing further spikes in oil prices, which is bearish for crypto.

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